An example processor-implemented method for generating corners of a display area is provided. The method comprises detecting a dominant line for each side of the display area, each dominant line used to identify corners, detecting subline segments on each side of the display area, determining a distance between the corners identified by the dominant lines and the sub-line segments on each side, and generating the corners of the display area based on the distance.
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19. A non-transitory machine-readable storage medium comprising instructions executable by a processing resource of a computing system to generate corners of a display area, the instructions executable to:
detect a dominant line for each side of a display area, each dominant line used to identify corners;
detect subline segments on each side of the display area;
determine a distance between the corners identified by the dominant lines and the sub-line segments on each side;
check whether the distance is within a predetermined tolerance level;
generate the corners of the display area using the subline segments when the distance is within the predetermined tolerance level; and
generate the corners of the display area using the dominant lines when the distance is not within the predetermined tolerance level.
1. A system, comprising: a support structure including a base, an upright member extending upward from the base, and a cantilevered top extending outward from the upright member and including a fold mirror and a plurality of sensors; a projector unit attachable to the upright member; a computing device attachable to the projector unit; and a touch sensitive mat communicatively coupled to the computing device, and wherein the computing device is to cause: the plurality of sensors to detect a dominant line for each side of a projector display area, each dominant line used to identify corners, the plurality of sensors to detect subline segments on each side of the projector display area, the projector unit to determine a distance between the corners identified by the dominant lines and the sub-line segments on each side, and the projector unit to generate the corners of the projector display area based on the distance.
14. A system, comprising:
a support structure including a base, an upright member extending upward from the base, and a cantilevered top extending outward from the upright member and including a fold mirror and a plurality of sensors;
a projector unit attachable to the upright member;
a computing device attachable to the projector unit; and
a touch sensitive mat communicatively coupled to the computing device, and wherein the computing device is to cause;
the plurality of sensors to detect a dominant line for each side of the projector display area, each dominant line used to identify corners,
the plurality of sensors to detect subline segments on each side of the projector display area,
the projector unit to determine a distance between the corners identified by the dominant lines and the sub-line segments on each side, and
the projector unit to generate the corners of the projector display area based on the distance;
wherein the computing device is to cause the plurality of sensors to realign with the projector according to a comparison of the border of the image reflected on to the touch sensitive mat and a border of an image previously projected on to the touch sensitive mat.
2. A processor-implemented method of operating the system of
3. The method of
4. The method of
5. The method of
6. The method of
7. The method of
8. The method of
9. The method of
10. The system of
11. The system of
12. The system of
13. The system of
check whether the distance is within a predetermined tolerance level;
generate the corners based on the distance by using the dominant lines when the distance is not within the predetermined tolerance level; and
generate the corners based on the distance by using the subline segments when the distance is within the predetermined tolerance level.
15. The system of
16. The system of
17. The system of
18. The system of
20. The non-transitory machine-readable storage medium comprising instructions of
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Computer systems typically employ a display or multiple displays which are mounted on a support stand and/or are incorporated into some other component of the computer system. For displays employing touch sensitive technology (e.g., touch screens), it is often desirable for a user to interact directly with such displays in order to fully utilize such touch technology during system operations. However, optimum ergonomic placement of a display for simply viewing an image thereon is often at odds with such placement for engaging in touch interaction therewith. Thus, users desiring to use a single computer system for both traditional viewing applications as well as touch interactive application often encounter difficulties in positioning and/or utilizing such systems.
For a detailed description of various examples, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
Certain terms are used throughout the following description and claims to refer to particular system components. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, computer companies may refer to a component by different names. This document does not intend to distinguish between components that differ in name but not function. In the following discussion and in the claims, the terms “including” and “comprising” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to . . . .” Also, the term “couple” or “couples” is intended to mean either an indirect or direct connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct electrical or mechanical connection, through an indirect electrical or mechanical connection via other devices and connections, through an optical electrical connection, or through a wireless electrical connection. As used herein the term “approximately” means plus or minus 10%. In addition, as used herein, the phrase “user input device” refers to any suitable device for providing an input, by a user, into an electrical system such as, for example, a mouse, keyboard, a hand (or any finger thereof), a stylus, a pointing device, etc.
The following discussion is directed to various examples of the disclosure. Although one or more of these examples may be preferred, the examples disclosed should not be interpreted, or otherwise used, as limiting the scope of the disclosure, including the claims. In addition, one skilled in the art will understand that the following description has broad application, and the discussion of any example is meant only to be descriptive of that example, and not intended to intimate that the scope of the disclosure, including the claims, is limited to that example.
Referring now to
Referring still to
Upright member 140 includes a first or upper end 140a, a second or lower end 140b opposite the upper end 140a, a first or front side 140c extending between the ends 140a, 140b, and a second or rear side 140d opposite the front side 140c and also extending between the ends 140a, 140b. The lower end 140b of member 140 is coupled to the rear end 120b of base 120, such that member 140 extends substantially upward from the support surface 15.
Top 160 includes a first or proximate end 160a, a second or distal end 160b opposite the proximate end 160a, a top surface 160c extending between the ends 160a, 160b, and a bottom surface 160d opposite the top surface 160c and also extending between the ends 160a, 160b. Proximate end 160a of top 160 is coupled to upper end 140a of upright member 140 such that distal end 160b extends outward therefrom. As a result, in the example shown in
Referring still to
During operation, mat 200 is aligned with base 120 of structure 110, as previously described to ensure proper alignment thereof. In particular, in this example, rear side 200b of mat 200 is placed between the raised portion 122 of base 120 and support surface 15 such that rear end 200b is aligned with front side 120a of base, thereby ensuring proper overall alignment of mat 200, and particularly surface 202, with other components within system 100. In some examples, mat 200 is aligned with device 150 such that the center line 155 of device 150 is substantially aligned with center line 205 of mat 200; however, other alignments are possible. In addition, as will be described in more detail below, in at least some examples surface 202 of mat 200 and device 150 are electrically coupled to one another such that user inputs received by surface 202 are communicated to device 150. Any suitable wireless or wired electrical coupling or connection may be used between surface 202 and device 150 such as, for example, WI-FI. BLUETOOTH®, ultrasonic, electrical cables, electrical leads, electrical spring-loaded pogo pins with magnetic holding force, or some combination thereof, while still complying with the principles disclosed herein. In this example, exposed electrical contacts disposed on rear side 200b of mat 200 engage with corresponding electrical pogo-pin leads within portion 122 of base 120 to transfer signals between device 150 and surface 202 during operation. In addition, in this example, the electrical contacts are held together by adjacent magnets located in the clearance between portion 122 of base 120 and surface 15, previously described, to magnetically attract and hold (e.g., mechanically) a corresponding ferrous and/or magnetic material disposed along rear side 200b of mat 200.
Referring specifically now to
Thus, referring briefly to
Projector assembly 184 is generally disposed within cavity 183 of housing 182, and includes a first or upper end 184a, a second or lower end 184b opposite the upper end 184a. Upper end 184a is proximate upper end 182a of housing 182 while lower end 184b is proximate lower end 182b of housing 182. Projector assembly 184 may comprise any suitable digital light projector assembly for receiving data from a computing device (e.g., device 150) and projecting an image or images (e.g., out of upper end 184a) that correspond with that input data. For example, in some implementations, projector assembly 184 comprises a digital light processing (DLP) projector or a liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) projector which are advantageously compact and power efficient projection engines capable of multiple display resolutions and sizes, such as, for example, standard XGA (1024×768) resolution 4:3 aspect ratio or standard WXGA (1280×800) resolution 16:10 aspect ratio. Projector assembly 184 is further electrically coupled to device 150 in order to receive data therefrom for producing light and images from end 184a during operation. Projector assembly 184 may be electrically coupled to device 150 through any suitable type of electrical coupling while still complying with the principles disclosed herein. For example, in some implementations, assembly 184 is electrically coupled to device 150 through an electric conductor, WI-FI, BLUETOOTH®, an optical connection, an ultrasonic connection, or some combination thereof. In this example, device 150 is electrically coupled to assembly 184 through electrical leads or conductors (previously described) that are disposed within mounting member 186 such that when device 150 is suspended from structure 110 through member 186, the electrical leads disposed within member 186 contact corresponding leads or conductors disposed on device 150.
Referring still to
Sensor bundle 164 includes a plurality of sensors and/or cameras to measure and/or detect various parameters occurring on or near mat 200 during operation. For example, in the specific implementation depicted in
Referring now to
In some examples, device 150 directs assembly 184 to project an image onto surface 202 of mat 200. In addition, device 150 may also display an image on the display 152 (which may or may not be the same as the image projected onto surface 202 by assembly 184). The image projected by assembly 184 may comprise information and/or images produced by software executing within device 150. A user (not shown) may then interact with the image displayed on surface 202 and display 152 by physically engaging the touch sensitive surface 202 of mat 200. Such interaction may take place through any suitable method such as, direct interaction with a user's hand 35, through a stylus 25, or other suitable user input device(s).
In some examples, both space 188 and space 168 coincide or correspond with surface 202 of mat 200, previously described, to effectively integrate the functionality of the touch sensitive surface 202, projector assembly 184, and sensor bundle 164 within a defined area. Referring to
Although the computer system 100 may be delivered to a user with factory calibrated settings, misalignment of various components of the system 100 may occur due to various reasons, such as a loose connection, mechanical conditions, or user interaction. As an example, changes in temperature may cause components of the system 100, such as the touch sensitive surface 202 of the mat 200, to thermally expand or contract, resulting in potential misalignment with respect to other components of the system 100 (e.g., the projector assembly 184 and/or the sensor bundle 164).
Misalignment of one or more components of the system 100 may affect the integrated functionality of the touch sensitive surface 202, projector assembly 184, and sensor bundle 164 within a defined area (e.g., the surface 202). For example, sensors of the sensor bundle 164 may inadvertently change positions with respect to the touch sensitive surface 202 and/or the projector assembly 184, positioning of the surface 202 may inadvertently change with respect to the sensor bundle 164 and/or the projector assembly 184, or both the sensor bundle 164 and the surface 202 may inadvertently change positions with respect to the projector assembly 184.
Referring to
In one example, in order to accurately detect the four corners of the projector display space 188, dominant lines 710 may be determined. For example, the system may use a probabilistic-based Hough line detection algorithm as an initial (e.g. rough) detection to identify a line segment which matches closest to the projector display edge. Such line segment is considered to be the dominant line, which may be defined as a line candidate generated by the best line-fitting with the majority of the edge points in the projector display space 188 based on edge detection. In one implementation, a color intensity method may be used for edge detection. More specifically, sensors from the sensor bundle 164 may be used for differentiating a color intensity of the projector display space 188 from color intensity of an area outside the space 188. Histogram equalization may be performed on the regions of interest to obtain high and low thresholds for an edge detection algorithm (e.g., Canny edge detection). Upon running the edge detection algorithm, edge points indicating the perimeter of the projector display space 188 may be extracted (e.g., edge points for all four sides of the space 188). As discussed earlier, a line fitting algorithm may be used for determining four fitted lines, which may be representative of the perimeter of the projector display space 188. It should be noted that this line detection/fitting approach is deterministic and repeatable unlike a non-deterministic algorithm (e.g., RANdom SAmple Consensus (RANSAC), which is produces a reasonable result only with a certain probability, with this probability increasing as more iterations are allowed).
In one implementation, this is performed for each side of the projector display space 188. As shown in
Referring to
In another implementation, the projector display space 188 may have borders that are straight. More specifically, the projector display space 188 may be a trapezoid shaped area with undistorted sides (e.g., straight lines). In such an implementation, the dominant lines and the sublines are almost the same. For example, the position difference may be measured to be found at 0.5 mm or less.
Sensors from the sensor bundle 164 (e.g., color camera 164b, IR camera, or depth sensor 164c) may be used to detect the dominant lines around corners of the touch sensitive surface 202 (e.g., 902a-d) and corners of the projector display space 188 (e.g., 904a-d), according to an example. Referring to the detection of the corners 902a-d of the touch sensitive surface 202, camera 164b may be used to take either a still image or a video of the whole mat 200, or at least relevant portions of the mat 200. As explained before in reference to
Similarly, as described earlier in reference to
Further, the system may move forward with detecting subline segments for both the projector display space 188 and the touch sensitive surface 202. As mentioned above, the dominant lines and the sublines are almost the same in this example since the borders of both the projector display space 188 and the touch sensitive surface 202 are straight due to the limited distortion of these spaces. For example, the position difference may be measured to be found at 0.5 mm or less. Accordingly, the system may generate the corners of both the projector display space 188 and the touch sensitive surface 202 based on either dominant lines or subline segments, which result in the same corner locations.
In a further implementation, upon detecting the corners 902a-d of the touch sensitive surface 202 and the corners 904a-d of the projector display space 188, correspondence between the two sets of corners may be determined, based according to mapping methods, such as homography. As an example, based upon the correspondence between the two sets of corners, the projector 184 may adjust settings for the border of the image reflected on to the mat 200 (e.g., border of the projector display space 188) to fit within the detected border of the mat 200 (e.g., the touch sensitive surface 202). In another implementation, the corners 902a-d of the touch sensitive surface 202 may be reversely mapped to the corners 904a-d of the projector display space 188 for realigning mapping between the projector assembly 184 and the touch sensitive mat 200 (e.g., via homography). As an example, vector offsets may be generated between the two sets of corners in order to determine any correspondence. Based upon the differences detected between the two sets of corners, calibration operations may be performed (e.g., automatic and/or manual) on one or more components of the system 100. If the misalignment between the two sets of corners is above an acceptability tolerance, the system 100 may inform the user to disconnect and reconnect the mat 200 by aligning the mat 200 with the base 120 of structure 110, as previously described to ensure proper alignment thereof. However, if the misalignment between the two sets of corners (e.g., 902a-d and 904a-d) is below an acceptability tolerance, but above a usability tolerance, the system 100 may automatically recalibrate in order for the border of the projector display space 188 to coincide with the border of the touch sensitive surface 202. As an example, the automatic recalibration may occur adjusting firmware settings of the project 184.
Although the use of different colors are described with reference to
Computing device 150 may include at least one processing resource. In examples described herein, a processing resource may include, for example, one processor or multiple processors included in a single computing device or distributed across multiple computing devices. As used herein, a “processor” may be at least one of a central processing unit (CPU), a semiconductor-based microprocessor, a graphics processing unit (GPU), a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) to retrieve and execute instructions, other electronic circuitry suitable for the retrieval and execution instructions stored on a machine-readable storage medium, or a combination thereof.
As used herein, a “machine-readable storage medium” may be any electronic, magnetic, optical, or other physical storage apparatus to contain or store information such as executable instructions, data, and the like. For example, any machine-readable storage medium described herein may be any of a storage drive (e.g., a hard drive), flash memory, Random Access Memory (RAM), any type of storage disc (e.g., a compact disc, a DVD, etc.), and the like, or a combination thereof. Further, any machine-readable storage medium described herein may be non-transitory.
In the example of
Turning now to the operation of the system 100,
The illustrated process 1100 begins at block 1105. At 1105, a dominant line may be detected for each side of the projector display space. More specifically, a probabilistic-based Hough line detection algorithm to identify a line segment which matches closest to the projector display edge. Such line segment is defined as the dominant line, which is a line candidate generated by the best line-fitting with the majority of the edge points in the projector display space based on edge detection. In one implementation, a color intensity method may be used for edge detection. More specifically, sensors from the sensor bundle may be used for differentiating a color intensity of the projector display space from color intensity of an area outside the space. Histogram equalization may be performed on the regions of interest to obtain high and low thresholds for an edge detection algorithm (e.g., Canny edge detection). Upon running the edge detection algorithm, edge points indicating the perimeter of the projector display space may be extracted (e.g., edge points for all four sides of the space). As discussed earlier, a line fitting algorithm may be used for determining four fitted lines, which may be representative of the perimeter of the projector display space. The four fitted lines (e.g., the dominant lines) may be used to identify corners for the projector display space.
At block 1110, subline segments are detected. In particular, this process may involve identifying two subline segments for each edge. A subline segment may be defined as a line hitting close to the two corners on each side of the projector display space by fitting of edge points of a smaller region. The subline segments may be used because fitting a long edge to a single line may lose accuracy on either corner due to the nonexistence of straight lines under a system with optical distortion.
At block 1115, the computing system 100 may measure the distance from the corners identified by the dominant lines to the subline segments. At block 1120, the system checks whether this distance is within a predetermined tolerance level. If the distance is found to be within the tolerance, at block 1125, the corners are generated using the subline segments. If the distance is found to be outside of the tolerance, at block 1130, the corners are generated using the dominant lines.
Although the flowchart of
In the manner described, through use of examples of a computer system 100 in accordance with the principles disclosed herein, an additional touch sensitive display may be projected onto a touch sensitive surface (e.g., surface 202) to provide dual screen capability for a computing device (e.g., device 150).
While device 150 has been described as an all-in-one computer, it should be appreciated that in other examples, device 150 may further employ the use of more traditional user input devices such as, for example, a keyboard and a mouse. In addition, while sensors 164a. 164b. 164c. 164d within bundle 164 have been described as each representing a single sensor or camera, it should be appreciated that each of the sensors 164a, 164b, 164c, 164d may each include multiple sensors or cameras while still complying with the principles described herein. Further, while top 160 has been described herein as a cantilevered top, it should be appreciated that in other examples, top 160 may be supported at more than one point and is thus may not be cantilevered while still complying with the principles disclosed herein.
The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principles and various embodiments of the present invention. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
Tang, Yun, Tan, Kar-Han, Kang, Jinman, Short, David Bradley, Marathe, Amit A, Tretter, Daniel R
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